Metro

Yankees GM ‘stalker’ slapped with new, 52-count indictment

A Manhattan grand jury has lodged a new, 52-count indictment against the alleged shake-down mistress of Yankees GM Brian Cashman — charging her in a campaign of harassment, coercion and fraud well beyond the baseball big, according to newly revealed documents.

The updated charges against Louise Meanwell — the bulk of which were voted today — involve at least five victims, including two former boyfriends, her ex-husband, and her ex-mother-in-law, a source familiar with the investigation said.

Meanwell, 36 — a buxom blonde Brit who also goes by the name Neathway — has additionally been slammed with four counts of felony perjury relating to her four days of gabby testimony before the grand jury.

Prior to today, she’d faced a truncated indictment, voted a month ago, charging her with grand larceny in her alleged shake down of Cashman plus additional harassment charges concerning ex-Wall Streeter beau Thomas Walsh, who she’d dated for just one week in 2010.

Meanwell managed to extort a total of $6,000 from the married Cashman by threatening to go public with their ten month affair, and was trying to extort $15,000 more, prosecutors had alleged when she was arrested in February.

But with this superseding indictment, the grand larceny charges against Meanwell have been hiked up to a level of felony, alleging theft in excess of $50,000. She now faces up to 15 years in the slammer if convicted.

The newly revealed charges do not name victims. But The Post has learned that in addition to Cashman and Walsh, she is now accused of victimizing her ex-husband, Jason Bump, who has custody of their teenaged daughter, along with his mother, Mary Bump. All of the Bumps live upstate and have restraining orders against Meanwell.

The last victim is Todd Hawk, a Wall Street bond trader who lives in New Jersey and who dated Meanwell in 2007. A source said that Meanwell allegedly harassed Hawk for four years.

The newly added charges include stalking, harassment, criminal impersonation and thousands more in lesser grand larcenies, along with charges alleging she filed false documents and records.

At least 13 people have sought protection orders against Meanwell in recent years.

Meanwell remains in Rikers unable to post $200,000 cash bail. She is due in court for the official unsealing of this indictment on April 11.

A spokesman for Cashman declined comment. Defense lawyer Rory Bellantoni did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but is barred from speaking about the case by a judge’s gag order.